GAME NOTES: Third-round NCAA Tournament action in the Midwest Region concludes
on Sunday with a contest pitting the 14th-seeded Mercer Bears against the
11th-seeded Tennessee Volunteers at PNC Arena in Raleigh.

The winner of the game will move on to face the Michigan Wolverines next
Friday in Indianapolis.

Mercer pulled off the most shocking tournament upset this season with a 78-71
victory over the Duke Blue Devils in second-round action on Friday. The Bears,
who won the Atlantic Sun Tournament by beating last year's Cinderella story
Florida Gulf Coast, will try to duplicate FGCU's success by advancing to the
Sweet 16.

Tennessee was dropped by Florida in the SEC Tournament earlier this month, but
has now won two national tournament games in a row - against Iowa in a first-
round contest to make it through to the round of 64, then against UMass,
86-67, in the second round.

Tennessee leads the all-time series with Mercer, 3-1.

Many had already pegged Duke as not only a favorite to advance through the
second round with relative ease over Mercer, but had the Blue Devils possibly
making through the tough Midwest region into the Final Four. Mercer had other
plans. Duke held just a one-point lead over the Bears at the end of the first
half Friday, and the teams traded leads in the second until Mercer was able to
pull away down the stretch. Jakob Gollon scored a team-high 20 points in the
win, adding five rebounds to his stat line. Daniel Coursey chipped in 17
points, and Anthony White Jr. scored 13. Both Langston Hall and Ike Nwamu
chipped in 11 points in the victory.

Hall went under his season scoring average, but the well-rounded scoring
display was more important for the Bears in the overall scheme. Hall enters
the matchup against Tennessee as the team's leading scorer at 14.6 ppg, adding
a team-best 5.6 apg mark to his resume. Coursey is the only other Mercer
player to average a double-digit point total at 10.1 ppg, but the Bears still
manage to get a solid offensive showing per outing, netting 79.2 ppg as a
unit. Coursey paces the squad with a 6.5 rpg average, and defensively the
Bears give up just 66.5 ppg to opponents.

Tennessee's second-round contest against Massachusetts started off as what
appeared to be an evenly matched game, but the Volunteers suddenly caught fire
midway through the frame and led the Minutemen, 41-22, at the end of the
period, which allowed Tennessee to coast to the finish. Jarnell Stokes had a
spectacular game for the Vols, netting 26 points and grabbing a team-best 14
rebounds. Jordan McRae tallied 21 points in the win, while Josh Richardson
contributed 15 points and five assists. Jeronne Maymon finished the game with
the Vols' second double-double, scoring 11 points to go with 11 rebounds.

McRae has been a consistent scorer this season for Tennessee. He leads the
team entering the game against Mercer with an 18.7 ppg average, having scored
over 100 more points than Stokes, who is second on the team at 15.1 ppg.
Stokes tops the Vols in rebounding this season with 10.5 rpg, and Maymon adds
8.3 boards per outing of his own. Maymon is Tennessee's third and final
double-digit scorer at 10.1 ppg. The Volunteers are netting 71.9 ppg through
35 games played, and give up a minimal 61.3 ppg to opponents.

Mercer will certainly present some challenges, especially with such a fast-
paced, up-tempo offense that centers around getting to the rim. But
Tennessee's interior defense is one of the best in the country, led by Stokes
and Maymon underneath. If Tennessee can keep Gollon away from the basket and
limit Hall's opportunities, the Volunteers will be heading to the Sweet 16.